Mixed messaging: Joe Camel was forced out of ads, so why is Juul allowed on TV?

By Michelle Andrews Kaiser Health News

Thursday

Sep 12, 2019 at 8:52 PM

Why does e-cigarette maker Juul advertise its product on TV when cigarette ads are banned? The short answer: Because it can.

For nearly 50 years, cigarette advertising has been banned from TV and radio. But electronic cigarettes — those battery-operated devices that often resemble oversized USB drives with flavored nicotine “pods” that clip in on the end — aren’t addressed in the law.

Since launching its product in 2015, Juul Labs, based in San Francisco, has taken the e-cigarette market by storm and now accounts for roughly 75% of e-cigarette sales at convenience stores and mass retail outlets. Until recently, TV ads haven’t played a role in Juul’s marketing, which relied primarily on social media.

But this year, the company launched a $10 million TV advertising campaign, “Make the Switch,” that it said was aimed at helping adults find a healthier alternative to smoking cigarettes. The campaign also features print and radio ads.

Many public health advocates are skeptical of the company’s repeated assertions that adult smokers are its target audience. When the company launched its sleek e-cigarette four years ago, it relied on social media outlets such as Facebook, Instagram and Twitter to promote its product in ads that, especially at the beginning, featured playful, partying 20-somethings.

As the product caught on, young people helped spread the word to other young people using hashtags like #juul. Social media influencers who posted content praising Juul amplified the message.

“There’s overwhelming evidence that the behavior of Juul contributed to the product being sold to youth,” said Dr. Robert Jackler, a professor and the principal investigator at Stanford Research Into the Impact of Tobacco Advertising at the university’s medical school.

Juul said it is not targeting children and teens and supports efforts to limit tobacco products to people under age 21.

“We recognize that youth use of vapor products is a problem that requires an effective and appropriate response from industry and regulatory bodies,” said Ted Kwong, a Juul Labs spokesman. “We strongly support restrictions on social media marketing of vapor products.”

Are they safer?E-cigarettes, also called vapes, were introduced in the United States in the mid-2000s. Some early versions resembled actual cigarettes. Juul’s product can be plugged into a USB port to recharge and fits inconspicuously into the palm, often frustrating parents and teachers seeking to stop teens from using it.

E-cigarettes don’t produce tar, in which most of the cancer-causing and other harmful chemicals from tobacco smoke are found. But both products contain nicotine, which is highly addictive and can harm the developing brains of adolescents.

In addition, the vapor that people inhale when the liquid nicotine in e-cigarettes is heated may contain cancer-causing chemicals, heavy metals and other dangerous substances.

Nevertheless, e-cigarettes are often touted as a healthier alternative to cigarette smoking, and that’s the premise of Juul’s “Make the Switch” campaign. The testimonial ads feature adults describing the positive changes in their lives after they gave up smoking cigarettes to use Juul.

“We want adult smokers to hear directly from former adult smokers that Juul Labs provides a true alternative to combustible cigarettes and is showing unprecedented success, with studies showing 40 to 56 percent of adult smokers fully switching within 90 days of use,” said Kwong.Current lawAlthough adolescents may be more likely to see ads in social media than traditional broadcast and print ads, the Juul TV ads probably have an impact on them, said Bonnie Halpern-Felsher, a professor of pediatrics at Stanford University School of Medicine who developed a tobacco prevention toolkit for teachers.

“When you say that a product is for an adult, the message is not ‘Don’t use,’ it’s ‘Use these products and you’ll appear to be adult or mature,’” Halpern-Felsher said.

Anti-smoking advocates would like to see the same marketing limits applied to e-cigarettes that apply to so-called combustible cigarettes, including banning them from advertising on TV and radio.

They would also like to see the changes that were put in place under the Master Settlement Agreement in 1998 between the largest cigarette manufacturers and the attorneys general of 46 states applied to e-cigarettes. The states had sued the cigarette makers to recover their costs for treating sick and dying smokers. Among other things, the agreement banned most transit and billboard advertising of cigarettes, branded merchandise, free product samples and sponsorships of events, such as concerts and sporting events.

E-cigarette makers, such as Juul, have used some of those advertising methods over the years.

Never miss a story

Choose the plan that's right for you.
Digital access or digital and print delivery.